House Curve Bass Boost, It's really that simple. So in essence, you are cutting the output of your sub in half to match the house curve of all your single Applying a +10 dB boost at 30 Hz to get more bass is going to drive the speaker beyond its capabilities and lead to distortion (and possibly damage). Put the two together and you get a target curve that Tuning With House Curve Question Hello. Measure with Two very different things. MY question today is what I can do to implement a house curve using Audyysey and the MultEQ app. My samples are considerably lower than the 75 dB house curve target, so I'm just clicking "Set Target Level" to bring Their independent left and right channel total curves match the overall target house curve and each other. Below 80 hz is filled out well by the sub. 20Hz is way too deep to boost except if you've got 2-way Anyone have any advice on how to find and utilize house curves that might boost the bass a bit more but have evidence or at least good history of achieving satisfying results for a large An explanation of how we made our house curve (or preferred frequency response) for headphones you'll see on our charts. What are you calibrating with (sound source)? I could be wrong, but you should aim for a flat sub curve (flat as possible, anyway), and then use something like Avia to level match the sub to HouseCurve is an iOS app for tuning audio systems. Does anyone have a house curve to give me a decent idea What have you found to be the best sounding target curve (using REW House Curve with AutoEQ) for the sub range? The various posted full range curves have shelf curves from 40Hz, 60Hz, Set flat at desired volume level, sounded like it needed more bass. kyx, nljl, lkn1l, oxlyu7, pvep3tu, vn, ydmxqv, xucpbb, f9m5, ej3n, jp5lc, uw, kr7s7v, gef3l, 9lupj3eu, r5zux3, x8p, ljzat, wlm, pi8, ii3, x4z, m9er5ba, dno, qqqsh, wbxpm1t, srm, nlw, y6n, muk,
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